Our website uses cookies to store information on your computer. You may delete and block all cookies from this site, but parts of the site will not work as a result. Find out more about how we use cookies.
(Accept cookies and do not show this message again)
Shout99 - News matters for freelancers
Search Shout99 - News matters for freelancers
(Advanced Search)
   Join Shout99  About Shout99   Sitemap   Contact Shout99 25th Apr 2024
Forgot your password?
Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660
New Users Click Here
Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660
Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660
Front Page
News...
Freelancers' Shop...
Ask an Expert...
Letters
Direct Contracts
Press Links
Question Time
The Clubhouse
Conference Hall...
News from Partners
Accountants

Login
Sitemap

Business Links

Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660

Freelancers' Shop

Personal Financial Services
from ContractorFinancials

Mortgages

Pensions

ISAs

Income protection

... and more special offers for Shout99 readers in the Freelancers' Shop

Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660
  
Shout99 - Freelancers, FO35, Section 660

News for the
Construction Industry

Hardhatter.com - News for small businesses in the construction industry

Powered by
Powered by Novacaster
Advertisement
Cogent

Bid to secure strategic review for contractors
by Susie Hughes at 20:34 14/04/16 (News on Business)
A political party has tabled an amendment to the Finance Bill in a bid to secure a strategic review for contractors.
SNP Treasury spokesman Roger Mullin’s intervention calls on the Chancellor to report back within six months.

It comes after meetings between Mr Mullin and the employment intermediary trade body PRISM which has been campaigning for the review.

PRISM hopes it would result in official recognition for contractors and the way they work for the first time, as workers have historically been forced into one of two categories - employed and self-employed.

Mr Mullin’s amendment reads: “The Chancellor of the Exchequer must conduct a strategic review of the impact on workers defined as providing services through intermediaries of their treatment for income tax purposes, including the differential impact on different types of worker, and must publish the report of the review within six months of the passing of this Act.”

Advertisement
Speaking at the Finance Bill debate recently, Mr Mullin also made clear his party’s opposition to the Chancellor’s changes to travel and subsistence relief. George Osborne is removing T&S relief for contractors despite lobbyists efforts to show that they work at a series of temporary workplaces and lack job security. It is claimed that the changes will hit contractors working in rural areas, and in the oil and gas industry which is key to Scotland, particularly hard.

Crawford Temple, CEO of PRISM, welcomed the SNP amendment. He said: “Roger Mullin and his SNP colleagues have recognised the desperate need for a strategic review and it is fantastic that Mr Mullin has tabled the amendment.

“The way people work in Britain has evolved over many years and Government in the way it treats people for tax and other purposes has not kept up.

“The flexible workforce is one of the best things about the labour force in the UK and it is key to our future economic strength.

“This third way of working cannot be ignored any longer. We cannot go on any more with a two-sizes-fit-all system when the country would benefit wholesale from the rules, laws and regulations being brought up to date to recognise the entrepreneurial strength of contractors.”

--
If you wish to comment on this article, please log in and use the Reply button below. Registering is free and easy - see 'Join Shout99'.
-
Susie Hughes © Shout99 2016

View Comments (Flat Mode) Printer Version

Mail this to a friend
Bid to secure strategic review... Susie Hughes - 14/04
    Re: Bid to secure strategic re... skytraveller - 20/04
       Re: Bid to secure strategic re... JFE - 22/04

Copyright 1999-2018, Shout99.com | All Rights Reserved
Privacy Notice and Terms of Use
 

Advertisements
advert
advert
advert
advert